Foraging for Wild Edibles ~ Event

Sunday, July 12


Foraging
for Wild Edibles with expert forager and author Russ Cohen
Belchertown, Mass 2PM-5PM,
Join expert forager Russ Cohen as we discover more than 2 dozen of the 150 species of Massachusetts’ edible wild plants. This workshop aims to teach you how to enjoy nature while nibbling on the trail and is not meant for unsustainable commercial harvesting.
NOFA Members: $14 Non-members: $17. For complete information and to register online visit www.nofamass.org or call Tom at 781-894-4358 or email seedpotato@yahoo.com.

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Eat the View

Eat the View

A celebration of the beauty and bounty
of our local landscape

Friday, October 2, 2009 6-10pm

The Arena at the Tri-County Fairgrounds
Northampton,
Massachusetts

http://www.buylocalfood.com/ETV2009.htm

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Elder’s Meditation of the Day - June 20

“But in the Indian Spirit the land is still vested; it will be until other men are able to divine and meet its rhythm. Men must be born and reborn to belong. Their bodies must be formed of the dust of their forefathers’ bones.”
–Luther Standing Bear, OGLALA SIOUX
It is said when we walk on the Earth, we are walking on our ancestors and our unborn children. This is the relationship Native People have with the Earth. It is this relationship which gives insight into the Earth’s rhythm and heartbeat and creates the feeling of belonging. If you feel you belong to something, you’ll treat it with respect. If you feel you are above something, you’ll treat it with disrespect. Indian Spirituality is tied to the Earth. We belong to the Earth along with all other creatures on the Earth. We must align to this realization.
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Mi’kMaq Landscapes: From Animsim to Sacred ecology

Interesting book~

http://www.ashgate.com/default.aspx?page=637&calctitle=1&pageSubject=425&pagecount=2&title_id=9924&edition_id=11001&lang=cy

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How Locally Will We Be Eating in the Years Ahead?

How locally will we be eating in years ahead?

Published: Saturday, April 18, 2009

GREENFIELD — The breakfast of crab scallion pancakes and pork buns may have seemed exotic for the Franklin County Chamber of Commerce, but no more so than talk of which species of violets are tastiest.

Turners Falls resident Dave Jacke — who wrote two books on ”edible forest gardens” and teaches nationwide about ”fostering a different kind of agriculture” using perennials that have been long ignored as a food source — was one of four speakers on just how locally we’ll need to be eating in the years ahead.

Depending on how you define ”local,” Whately organic farmer David Jackson’s aptly named Enterprise Farm is already doing that, with year-round customers around the region for whom California produce is a thing of the past.

Ten calories of energy is required for each calorie of food we typically eat, said Jacke of Pleasant Street Community Garden. That’s in addition to the cost of transporting it the average of 1,500 miles to our tables in an era when energy costs are expected to rise dramatically.

”We can’t sustain that much longer,” he told the roughly 100 business and community leaders gathered at the monthly chamber breakfast. ”We’re all kind of in deep doo-doo here, even though most of us don’t know that.”

As people will look to grow more of their own food, and to get more of their food locally, he hopes his work on edible perennial gardens will help us do that more easily.

”I’d like to have my landscape and eat it too,” said Jacke, who is participating in a project to see how much of its own food supply Shelburne Falls can grow.

Jacke, who foresees nothing less than the ”wholesale restructuring of our economy and of our food system, contends that if Franklin County grew 20 percent more of its food, its economic activity would be increased by $20 million a year.

”There’s a great opportunity for all of us to have a stronger community and stronger networks, to re-invigorate our local economies.”

While it might seem contradictory, Enterprise Farm’s Jackson said his Whately business has grown dramatically by contracting with about 40 farms from Florida to Prince Edward Island to supply year-round produce to a dozen food co-ops, five food delivery systems and two subscription farms, as well as its own 450 ”farm-share” members. That’s 10 tractor-trailer loads of produce it sells off-season, where before it did none.

”Where I see the whole ‘local’ in what seems to be a strong marketing trend, is that a big part of the business is taking place in the winter time,” said Jackson, who was approached in 2007 by Green Fields Market about helping to shift its winter organic produce supply away from California.

Pretty much every farmer along the East Coast is up against the ‘evil empire,’ which is California,” said Jackson. But rising fuel prices and water shortages are challenging that state’s ability to undercut farms in the East, and a head of lettuce can be delivered here from Florida in two days rather than 10 from twice the distance.

As wholesale prices for organic produce drops, Jackson said, providing wintertime customers with Florida avocados and pecans from the Carolinas provides an opportunity for Enterprise and begins to develop a market for farms to extend their seasons to develop a ”regional foodshed.”

”What I see is a growing effort on the part of customers to put a face to the farmer and buy their food more locally, which to me is pretty impressive,” said Jackson.

Ed Maltby of Deerfield-based Northeast Organic Dairy Producers Alliance, and a developer of both the Our Family Farms dairy cooperative and the new Adams Family Slaughterhouse in Athol, advised consumers to be cautious, though, with labels — especially ”organic” and ”hormone-free.”

”The issue we keep coming back to is the integrity of labeling,” said Maltby. ”Without that, you consumers are going to the store thinking you’re buying something that comes straight from the farm, where in fact it comes from some large outfit out in Colorado (and) can never have the security of knowing where your food dollars are going.”

”The concept of marketing, where you see that happy cow on the front of your milk carton … in my opinion lacks reality,” he said. ”As we hit the crossroads where ‘buy local’ programs are maturing, where organic is now a $20 million, $25 million industry, we need to be assured that what is being marketed to us is, in fact, what it is.”

Sorrel Hatch of Gill said that after earning a degree in entomology, she returned to her family’s Upinngil Farm, which sells all the raw milk it can produce from its seven cows, as well as honey, seasonal berries, and even flour milled from its own wheat — all from its own stand.

”I decided that local was the key to building a long-term future,” Hatch said. ”The only thing that could really endure and safeguard the environment was direct contact between the consumer and the producer, and direct contact of the consumer with the land.

You can reach Richie Davis at rdavis@recorder.com or (413) 772-0261 Ext. 269

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Local Tots Learn about PermaCulture

Turners tots to eat (very) local as preschool plants its own garden

TUNERS FALLS — Preschool children in ”The Patch” neighborhood will soon be getting fresh vegetables from a garden just a few feet away from their playground.

The G Street Preschool, with the help of the several area gardening experts and local businesses, is building a garden.

Besides learning to care for the garden and getting fresh vegetables, which encourages good nutrition and healthy eating habits, children will also learn about scientific methods like the process of designing and building a garden, watching plants grow and seeing how the environment affects plant growth, said Marianne Bouthilette, education site supervisor for the G Street Preschool, which is part of Community Action’s Parent Child Development Center preschool program.

For now, the garden plots will just be for students at the school, but eventually, parents will also have the chance to farm their own plots, she said. If the project is a success, community members may also get to have a plot, Bouthilette said.

”We hope in the future to extend this to the community.”

With the price of food on the rise, learning how to produce your own food is becoming more desirable, said David K. Jacke, who lives on H Street, a few blocks from the school, and is helping with the garden.

”The (garden) can help change the culture of families so they can have healthy, local food. There’s such a need for people to start growing food because of what we’re doing with climate change.”

Jacke, a graduate of Conway Landscape School, runs Dynamics Ecological Design where he designs and installs ecological landscaping and gardens. He’s currently focusing on teaching permaculture, the practice of applying the principles of ecology to designing sustainable human habitats.

Students, parents and some community members gathered on Saturday to begin work on the garden.

The first section of garden will be a 13-by-8-foot section of raised vegetables beds along the fence behind the playground.

Behind the fence, in an overgrown field with a few saplings, there will be blueberry and gooseberry bushes and eventually fruit trees.

The beds will be built in the shape of a keyhole so children will be able to walk in the middle of the beds and be surrounded by garden, said Jacke.

There will also be a compost bin, which will collect scraps from breakfast and lunch at the school.

”Our world is wasteful,” said Bouthilette. ”This is teaching children how to recycle. It’s teaching children how to care for the earth and the world.”

A student from the Conway Landscape School designed the garden.

Besides Jacke, several other professionals in the garden and landscaping field are helping with the garden, including Kate Kerivan a Conway School alum, Tom Sullivan a current student and Holly Westcott, a compost consultant.

Rugg Lumber, Greenfield Farmers Cooperative Exchange, Wancyzk’s Nursery, Smith Vocational School and Communities Involved Sustaining Agriculture also donated to the project.

If the garden program is a success, it could be expanded to Community Action’s other preschool sites, said Bouthilette.

”Hopefully, this will be like a plant and the seeds will spread,” said Jacke.

You can reach Arn Albertini at: aalberti@recorder.com or (413) 772-0261 Ext. 264

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We Shall Remain

Great mini-series coming on PBS in April called “We Shall Remain”…check listings for your area.

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/weshallremain/the_films/making_of

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Baby Moose on the Loose!

A friend sent me this charming story….enjoy~

A baby moose was in distress in a creek.  A man got him out of the creek, tried to find the mother and send him on his way but, eventually, the moose stumbled back into the creek and was rescued again.  The baby moose followed the man home.
The man has only a small cabin so he took the moose to another neighbor who took these photos.  They took the moose the next day to a woman who looks after wild animals and she put it in a pen with a rescued fawn.
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Blue Jay

A few Jays are around today, they are among my favorite birds.  Some information about Brother Blue….

Description

  • Large songbird.
  • Crest on head.
  • Upperparts various shades of blue.
  • Size: 25-30 cm (10-12 in)
  • Wingspan: 34-43 cm (13-17 in)
  • Weight: 70-100 g (2.47-3.53 ounces)

Sex Differences

Sexes alike.

Sound

Very vocal; make a large variety of calls. Most frequent call is a harsh “jeer.” Also clear whistled notes and gurgling sounds.

»listen to songs of this species

Conservation Status

Breeding Bird Survey data show a slight but significant decline in Blue Jay numbers across the United States, with most of the decline in the East. Some have implicated it in the decline of some Neotropical migrant species because it is a nest predator and prefers forest edges, but little direct evidence has been found.

Other Names

Geai bleu (French)

Cool Facts

  • Although the migration of Blue Jays is an obvious phenomenon, with thousands moving past some points along the coast, much about it remains a mystery. Some jays are present throughout the winter in all parts of the range. Which jays move and which stay put? Although young jays may be more likely to migrate than adults, many adults do migrate. Some individual jays may migrate south in one year, stay north the next winter, and then migrate south again the next year. Why do they migrate when they do?
  • Many people dislike the Blue Jay because it is known to eat the eggs and nestlings of other birds. However, in an extensive study of Blue Jay feeding habits, only 1% of jays had evidence of eggs or birds in their stomachs. Most of the diet was composed of insects and nuts.
  • The Blue Jay frequently mimics the calls of hawks, especially the Red-shouldered Hawk. It has been suggested that these calls provide information to other jays that a hawk is around, or that they are used to deceive other species into believing a hawk is present.
  • Tool use in birds is rare. Although no tool use has been reported for wild Blue Jays, captive jays used strips of newspaper to rake in food pellets from outside of their cages.
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2nd Annual Seed Swap

Cabin Fever Seed Swap
When:  Saturday, Feb 28, 2009
Where:  Green Fields Market meeting room, Greenfield, MA (map)
The Second Annual “Cabin Fever” Seed Swap! Come to the upstairs meeting room at Green Fields Market for a rousing and rollicking seed swap, to be held from 1 to 4 o’clock pm Saturday Feb 28! Bring your seeds of all kinds, info and advice, and plenty of enthusiasm for seed saving and sharing! Experts, old pros, complete novices, and everyone in between are encouraged! No one will be turned away, even if you have no seeds to share! Seed swapping is Radical!!! For more information, contact Melinda, 774-2220 or melindamccreven@hotmail.com

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